Chips, packet (ready salted, salt and vinegar or chicken flavour) = NOT WOKE

Chips, packet (all other flavours) = WOKE

Chocolate, Whittaker’s Miraka Kirīmi = WOKE

Chocolate, other = NOT WOKE

yummy

    • Tankiedesantski [he/him]@hexbear.net
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      6 months ago

      The funniest thing is that he tried starting the war by punching against sushi, which even most kiwi boomers enjoy by this point.

      Like trying to launch an invasive species eradication campaign by strangling a puppy.

  • iridaniotter [she/her]@hexbear.net
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    6 months ago

    Pasta, canned (spaghetti) = NOT WOKE

    Pasta, real (spaghetti) = WOKE

    Straddling a fine line in the fascist movement here. What is their opinion on rice?

      • iridaniotter [she/her]@hexbear.net
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        6 months ago

        Those aren’t real fascism connoisseurs. True fascists hate pasta.

        Futurist cooking will be free of the old obsessions with volume and weight and will have as one of its principles the abolition of pastasciutta. Pastasciutta, however agreeable to the palate, is a passéist food because it makes people heavy, brutish, deludes them into thinking it is nutritious, makes them skeptical, slow, pessimistic.

        -Filippo Tommaso Marinetti

        Then Mussolini promoted rice, although probably due to supply chains instead of ideology.

        • TraschcanOfIdeology [they/them, comrade/them]@hexbear.net
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          6 months ago

          Sorta, yeah, but mussolini was really into wheat, too, especially as the way to “develop” southern Italy. Northern Italy mostly grew corn and rice, and southern Italy has been growing wheat for over 2000 years. One of the largest agricultural projects of the fascist era was the pursue of higher yields of wheat, mostly by the substitution of local, heirloom wheat varieties that co-evolved with local biodiversity and production methods, in favor of “modern” wheat, which required heavy tilling, chemical fertilizers and mechanized agriculture.

          All of this and more, like the multiple “sagre” (agricultural festivals based around a local product; for example “the sagra of the Piedmontese fat Ox” in the north) was done in the name of “agricultural autarchy”, a rudimentary, fascist understanding of national food security, and the uplifting of the individual peasant’s image in Italian consciousness as a patriotic, self-determined, and independent example of the kind of man that fascist Italy expected of its citizenry, despite the material reality of most peasants being somewhere between day laborers in large landholder’s land (the real powrr base of the rural fascist), and impoverished subsistence farmers.